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  #1  
Old 11-12-2005, 04:37 PM
ZeeJustin ZeeJustin is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Northern VA (near DC)
Posts: 1,213
Default My Korea Trip Report!

My junior year of high school, my best friend was from South Korea. He went home to visit his parents during spring break, and I came along. He lived in Seoul, so everything here on out only applies to Seoul. I never really saw any other part of the country.

Seoul is not meant for American tourism. There are no white people there whatsoever, and very few people speak english, even in restaurants and stuff. The whole week I was in Korea, I only saw one white person on the street (although I saw like 5 at one hotel I ate dinner at).

Korea is different, but in a cool way. It's a tiny bit like NYC the way the city is cetup. You can walk or subway anywhere in the city, and you'll see all kinds of (Korean) people walking the streets.

I liked the food. I'm not a big fan of kim chi, but there was some rib dish that was really popular that I loved. I forget the name of it. I tried lots of different foods and liked almost all of them. There was one restaurant where you cooked your own food and that was also really good. Someone said soemthing about raw food, but I don't think I had any while in Korea except for the one sushi restaurant I went to which was sub par (Sushi is not popular in Korea). And you know those hot dog stands they have in NYC? Well they have them in Korea, except they serve squid and pig liver.

The coolest thing I did was a night club I went to. They have a big dance floor in the middle, but there were very few guys dancing. The dance floor is surrounded by a dozen rooms. Each room has a table and a Karaoke Bar. You go there and order drinks (and maybe some fruit) for the table, and the waiters constantly bring girls from the dance floor to your room. They aren't employees. They are just other young kids looking to have fun. If they don't like you, they leave, and the waiters bring around different girls. If they like you, they stay.

Unfortunately, the girls are pretty conservative in Korea. I met some Korean gril that claimed she was a model, and was dissapointed that all I got out of it was a few kisses, but my friends were really impressed because apparently it isn't common to meet a girl and kiss her in the same night. Maybe they were just being nice, I dunno.

I did some touristy stuff too. The tower of Seoul was pretty cool, and I went to this amusement park which was half-indoor and half-outdoor. That place was really awesome. The best part was this one ride that lifted you really high in the air, and then spun you around over the water that surrounded the little island the amusement park was on. It's kind of cool when you look down and see nothing but water.

If you are looking for a culturally educational experience, by all means, go to Korea. If you are looking for a major tourist center, hold out until Germany. It would take a lot to get me to go to Korea again, but I'm very happy I went the first time, and greatly enjoyed most of the trip.

Edit: The girls there are very cute too. Most of the high schools have the girls wear Catholic-Schoolish uniforms, and those are very hot. Make sure to walk outside around 3-5pm to find a few large groups of them walking about.
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  #2  
Old 11-12-2005, 04:43 PM
KaneKungFu123 KaneKungFu123 is offline
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Default Re: My Korea Trip Report!

ZJ,

From your trip report I didnt pick up on the reasons why you wouldnt want to go back to S.Korea. Just curious. Great Report.
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  #3  
Old 11-12-2005, 04:53 PM
Blarg Blarg is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,519
Default Re: My Korea Trip Report!

[ QUOTE ]
ZJ,

From your trip report I didnt pick up on the reasons why you wouldnt want to go back to S.Korea. Just curious. Great Report.

[/ QUOTE ]

Me either. Made the place sound attractive to me. Except for the nobody to talk to in English, I guess. That could be kind of lonely if you've got a lot of time on your hands without anybody you know around.

I immediately had a fantasy conversation in my mind, with one of those cuties.

Her: How do you like my English?
Me: You're even cuter when you speak English.

Okay, it's a corny low-rent fantasy, but that's part of what makes them fantasies, yes?
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  #4  
Old 11-12-2005, 04:56 PM
KaneKungFu123 KaneKungFu123 is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,026
Default Re: My Korea Trip Report!

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
ZJ,

From your trip report I didnt pick up on the reasons why you wouldnt want to go back to S.Korea. Just curious. Great Report.

[/ QUOTE ]

Me either. Made the place sound attractive to me. Except for the nobody to talk to in English, I guess. That could be kind of lonely if you've got a lot of time on your hands without anybody you know around.

I immediately had a fantasy conversation in my mind, with one of those cuties.

Her: How do you like my English?
Me: You're even cuter when you speak English.

Okay, it's a corny low-rent fantasy, but that's part of what makes them fantasies, yes?

[/ QUOTE ]

There are places you can go where you will find english speaking koreans. just show up at a university. walk around. introduce yourself. tell them you want to learn korean. <<giggles, giggles>> get your dick sucked. Never return to the USA.
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  #5  
Old 11-12-2005, 05:40 PM
ZeeJustin ZeeJustin is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Northern VA (near DC)
Posts: 1,213
Default Re: My Korea Trip Report!

[ QUOTE ]
ZJ,

From your trip report I didnt pick up on the reasons why you wouldnt want to go back to S.Korea. Just curious. Great Report.

[/ QUOTE ]

The biggest problem was the language barrier. I remember a couple of times my friend Sun took me out with some of his old friends from middle school, and I just sat there listening to them talk Korean. Also, I didn't really feel comfortable leaving the appartment by myself. I didn't have a key to get back in, a cell phone that worked, or any way of speaking with most the people there if I was in trouble. It seemed like only the younger (non-working) generation spoke english. It would have been a lot more friend if one of my American friends had come with me.

Oh yeah, I forgot to mention that I thought it was awesome to watch Starcraft on TV. They have three different general cable channels that show Starcraft. If you turn the TV on at a random time of day, there's a > 50% chance that at least one channel has Starcraft on.
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  #6  
Old 11-12-2005, 05:45 PM
Blarg Blarg is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,519
Default Re: My Korea Trip Report!

That sounds really bizarre as hell, the Starcraft thing.

I know the feeling when everyone at the table is speaking another language and you feel like an outcast. I've been through that quite a few times, and sooner or later it usually winds up feeling like crap, if not instantly. Those are the situations that make you feel you want to be anywhere else.
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  #7  
Old 11-12-2005, 04:48 PM
KaneKungFu123 KaneKungFu123 is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,026
Default Re: My Korea Trip Report!

[ QUOTE ]
My junior year of high school, my best friend was from South Korea. He went home to visit his parents during spring break, and I came along. He lived in Seoul, so everything here on out only applies to Seoul. I never really saw any other part of the country.

Seoul is not meant for American tourism. There are no white people there whatsoever, and very few people speak english, even in restaurants and stuff. The whole week I was in Korea, I only saw one white person on the street (although I saw like 5 at one hotel I ate dinner at).

Korea is different, but in a cool way. It's a tiny bit like NYC the way the city is cetup. You can walk or subway anywhere in the city, and you'll see all kinds of (Korean) people walking the streets.

I liked the food. I'm not a big fan of kim chi, but there was some rib dish that was really popular that I loved. I forget the name of it. I tried lots of different foods and liked almost all of them. There was one restaurant where you cooked your own food and that was also really good. Someone said soemthing about raw food, but I don't think I had any while in Korea except for the one sushi restaurant I went to which was sub par (Sushi is not popular in Korea). And you know those hot dog stands they have in NYC? Well they have them in Korea, except they serve squid and pig liver.

The coolest thing I did was a night club I went to. They have a big dance floor in the middle, but there were very few guys dancing. The dance floor is surrounded by a dozen rooms. Each room has a table and a Karaoke Bar. You go there and order drinks (and maybe some fruit) for the table, and the waiters constantly bring girls from the dance floor to your room. They aren't employees. They are just other young kids looking to have fun. If they don't like you, they leave, and the waiters bring around different girls. If they like you, they stay.

Unfortunately, the girls are pretty conservative in Korea. I met some Korean gril that claimed she was a model, and was dissapointed that all I got out of it was a few kisses, but my friends were really impressed because apparently it isn't common to meet a girl and kiss her in the same night. Maybe they were just being nice, I dunno.

I did some touristy stuff too. The tower of Seoul was pretty cool, and I went to this amusement park which was half-indoor and half-outdoor. That place was really awesome. The best part was this one ride that lifted you really high in the air, and then spun you around over the water that surrounded the little island the amusement park was on. It's kind of cool when you look down and see nothing but water.

If you are looking for a culturally educational experience, by all means, go to Korea. If you are looking for a major tourist center, hold out until Germany. It would take a lot to get me to go to Korea again, but I'm very happy I went the first time, and greatly enjoyed most of the trip.

Edit: The girls there are very cute too. Most of the high schools have the girls wear Catholic-Schoolish uniforms, and those are very hot. Make sure to walk outside around 3-5pm to find a few large groups of them walking about.

[/ QUOTE ]

In Thailand all University students are forced to wear a uniform. For girls, its a tight black mini-skirt and a see-through white blouse.
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  #8  
Old 11-12-2005, 04:54 PM
KaneKungFu123 KaneKungFu123 is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,026
Default Re: My Korea Trip Report!



THREAD OVER. BOOK YOUR FLIGHT.
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  #9  
Old 11-12-2005, 04:56 PM
Blarg Blarg is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,519
Default Re: My Korea Trip Report!

Do they all go to college at 14?

I like the male to female ratio in that picture. Looks like a good place to live.
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  #10  
Old 11-12-2005, 05:02 PM
KaneKungFu123 KaneKungFu123 is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,026
Default Re: My Korea Trip Report!

[ QUOTE ]
Do they all go to college at 14?

I like the male to female ratio in that picture. Looks like a good place to live.

[/ QUOTE ]

the asian girls you know in USA are probably mixed. you will be amazed how much smaller asian people are compared to westerners.
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